Born
at Detroit, Michigan, July 2, 1928, he won fame for piloting the Bell X-2
research rocket plane to a world's record of 126,200 feet on September
7, 1956, and for which he received the Mackay Trophy the next year.

He grew up in Cassopolis, Michigan, where he
went to high school. He graduated from Purdue University with degrees in
Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering in 1949 and entered the Air Force
through the Reserve Officers Training Corps. He took pilot training at
Randolph Air Force Base, Texas, where he got his wings and commission in
1950.

In 1950-51 he served with the 4th and 51st
Fighter Wings in Korea, flying 101 combat missions in F-86 Sabrejets and
30 in F-80 Shooting Stars. He shot down ten communist planes, being one
of 12 Air Force pilots with ten or more jet victories to his credit during
that war. He earned the Silver Star, three Distinguished Flying Crosses
and four Air Medals.

In 1953, he was assigned to Nellis Air Force
Base, Nevada, as an instructor for gunnery school. Serving as an
exchange officer for the Royal Air Force, he completed a course at the
Empire Test Pilot's School in Farnborough, England. He returned to the
U.S. in January 1955 for assignment at Edwards Air Force Base, California,
where he participated in flight development of all present-century-type
aircraft for the Air Force. he ran a total of aircraft flown, U.S. and
foreign, to 70 different types. He was then selected to be a pilot for
the X-15 program, and took the X-2 to its record altitude in September
1956. For this achievement be was presented with the Mackay Trophy, as
well as another Distinguished Flying Cross, by General Thomas White.

While flying an F-104 ultrasonic jet from Edwards
over the Mojave Desert on July 26, 1958, he crashed to his death near Rosamond
Dry Lake. He was buried in Section 2 of Arlington National Cemetery on
September 18, 1959. Kinross Air Force Base, Michigan, was named Kincheloe
Air Force Base in his honor. He posthumously received a number of awards
for pioneer experimental flights, including the Air Force Association David
C. Shilling Award, the Astronautic Award from the American Rocket Society,
and the Legion of Merit from the Air Force. He had been chosen by the Air
Force to be one of the first men to fly into space.

Iven Carl Kincheloe, Jr., was born on July
2, 1928, in Detroit. When Kincheloe was three his father lost his job in
the engineering department at Graham-Paige Motors, and the family moved
to a farm in Cassopolis, Michigan. It was there that young Kincheloe grew
up. From the very beginning he was interested in airplanes and first flew
in one before he was five years old. You have often seen the other kids
gather around him as he gets ready to launch his latest model airplane
into the air. Unlike most boys, however, Iven Kincheloe graduated from
flying model airplanes to flying the research planes that paved man's way
into space.

By the time he entered high school, Kincheloe
had decided upon his life's work. Although his parents had hoped their
only son would be a doctor or a lawyer, they realized how much he yearned
to be an aeronautical engineer and never tried to dissuade him. When at
the age of fourteen, young Kincheloe wanted to learn to fly, his father
not only approved but took flying lessons himself. After two hours of instruction
Kincheloe was ready to solo, but the law required him to wait until he
was sixteen. for two years Kincheloe waited impatiently, and when
he finally soloed on his sixteenth birthday, he was already as proficient
at acrobatics as his instructors and had logged over two hundred hours.

A year later Kincheloe graduated from high
school and enrolled in Indiana's Purdue University because he felt it had
the best school of aeronautical engineering. Purdue also had an ROTC program
and Kincheloe entered it with enthusiasm. In the summer of 1948 the ROTC
encampment was held at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, and Kincheloe met
Chuck Yeager, who, a few months earlier, had become the first man to exceed
the speed of sound. Yeager liked the blond young ROTC cadet with the steady
barrage of questions, and even allowed Kincheloe to sit in the cockpit
of the Bell X-1 Rocket Plane. Kincheloe's mind was made up. When he received
his engineering degree at Purdue he would join the Air Force and become
a test pilot. He wrote to his parents, "I think I have found what I really
want to do now."

Despite his busy academic schedule, Iven Kincheloe
was very active in campus life and is probably best remembered by his classmates
for his response to a prank perpetrated by rival students from the University
of Indiana. During the 1948 football season Purdue's students awoke one
morning to the air let out of the tires of their cars and the campus littered
with pamphlets ribbing the Purdue football team. The hijinx could not go
unanswered but the Indiana University Campus was now guarded against "visitors"
from Purdue. The student council approached Kincheloe, who had organized
a flying club and was part owner of a surplus Fairchild PT-19. A short
time later the PT appeared over the rival school. Swooping low over the
campus several times, Kincheloe attracted the attention of a large group
of students who had come out to watch. Then Kincheloe tossed a few packages
out of the plane, and the students looked up helplessly as ten thousand
leaflets came fluttering down on their campus.

Iven Kincheloe graduated from Purdue in June
1949 with a Bachelor of Science degree in aeronautical engineering. Through
the ROTC program he was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the Air Force
Reserve and assigned as a student pilot to Perrin Air Force Base, Texas.
He still had his heart set on test flying as a career, but in June 1950,
while he was flying TF-80 jet trainers at Williams Air Force Base, war
broke out in Korea and Kincheloe knew he could count on going into combat.
He looked forward to it because he realized that the demands of combat
flying would make him a better pilot. Test flying, for the time being,
would have to wait.

Kincheloe graduated from Pilot School on August
4, 1950. His parents drove down to Arizona from the farm in Michigan to
attend the celebration, and his mother proudly pinned the silver Air Force
pilot wings on her son's uniform.

If Kincheloe wanted to get into combat immediately
he was disappointed, The Air Force was not sending its brand-new pilots
into the war without further training in combat equipment. Kincheloe was
assigned to the 62nd Fighter Interceptor Squadron at Chicago's O'Hare Airport
where he learned to fly the North American F-86 Sabre. Just when he felt
that he had mastered the F-86 and was ready for combat, a request came
from the Air and Research Development Command for a pilot to do a special
test project on the F-86 at Edwards Air Force Base. Kincheloe got the Job.

The test were routine. All Kincheloe had to
do was fly a new type of Sabre, the F-86E, checking out the armament and
other new equipment: that had been installed. While at Edwards he was able
to meet more test pilots--Bill Bridgeman, Pete Everest, Scott Crossfield,
and his old friend Chuck Yeager. Out on the flight line he inspected the
various research projects--the "X" aircraft--and talked to the mechanics
and technicians. Kincheloe stored the knowledge away in his head for the
future when he, too, would be a test pilot.

Soon, the F-86E project ended and Kincheloe
reported back to Chicago. But his brief service as a junior test pilot
was on his records, a mark which he hoped would be in his favor when he
applied for a test pilot assignment after the Korean War.

In September 1951, Iven Kincheloe finally arrived
in Korea as a replacement pilot in the 325th Fighter Interceptor Squadron,
whose primary job was to fly escort for B-29's and RF-80 reconnaissance
planes. The squadron also flew fighter sweeps and shot down as many aircraft
as they could. The primary enemy fighter was the Russian MIG-15, similar
to the F-86 in appearance but superior in performance.

Kincheloe flew ten missions before he got a
fairly close look at an enemy plane, but the MIG did not hang around long
enough for him to shoot at it. By November he had flown sixteen missions
without even damaging a communist plane. Then he was transferred to the
25th Fighter Squadron at Suwon, which was equipped with the F-86E, the
plane Kincheloe tested back at Edwards. From then on the action picked
up. On January 25, 1952, Kincheloe's flight dived on three unsuspecting
MIG's. Kincheloe sighted on one of the enemy planes and raked it from wing
tip to wing tip. Pieces of the enemy's wing flew off and suddenly the MIG
exploded. A week later he received a spot promotion to captain. On February
2, he got his second MIG. By the end of the month he had flown seventy
one missions with only twenty-nine to go before he had to be sent home.
Kincheloe wanted to go back as an ace.

On April 1, Kincheloe shot down two MIGs within
a few minutes. He dived vertically on the first MIG, his bullets ripping
into the fuselage near the cockpit. The communist pilot bailed out and
Kincheloe swung around on a second MIG. He fired a long burst and part
of the tail came off. The MIG spun into the ground with its pilot still
inside. One more to go, and Kincheloe would be an ace.

A few days later Kincheloe's flight was escorting
a group of F-84s just south of the Yalu River when someone spotted a dozen
MIGs patrolling the river. Outnumbered, Kincheloe swooped close behind
a MIG and let him have a long burst right up the tailpipe. The MIG dropped
lower, but Kincheloe stayed with him, jockeying for another burst. Suddenly
the MIG pilot lowered his dive brakes and slowed down, hoping Kincheloe
would zoom past. But the alert F-86 pilot dropped his dive brakes, too,
and stayed behind the MIG. Lower and lower the spiraled. For five minutes
Kincheloe chased the MIG over the tree tops and finally let the MIG have
another long burst. The MIG rolled over on its back and crashed into the
hills. Kincheloe had become an ace on his eighty-fourth mission.

Iven Kincheloe flew his last mission in the
middle of May. He had flown 101 sorties in F-86s, thirty in F-80s and had
knocked down ten enemy aircraft and damaged eleven more. Now, on his way
home, he looked forward eagerly to that long awaited test pilot assignment.
To his disappointment he was ordered to Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada,
as a gunnery instructor. Because his captaincy was a combat promotion he
was also reduced to the rank of First Lieutenant. This, he must have thought,
was a fine way to treat a double-ace just returned from Korea. Kincheloe
immediately applied for a transfer to the test pilot school at Edwards
Air Force Base and settled down to work, waiting impatiently for the transfer.
But it did not come. He flew as often as he could, checking out in every
type of plane available at Nellis, and going on long cross-country flights
to build up flying time. Again he applied for a transfer. Again nothing
happened. The fighting in Korea ended in the summer of 1953, and Kincheloe
was again made a Captain. But he was still unhappy with his assignment
and began to think about resigning from the Air Force. Two aircraft manufacturers
had offered him Jobs in production testing and Kincheloe knew that he would
have to make up his mind soon. The jobs would not wait forever and other
pilots were anxious to get them. But still Kincheloe was reluctant to leave
the Air Force.

One day Kincheloe talked about his dilemma
to a friend in the Pentagon and learned about an opening at the Empire
Test Pilot's School in England. The United States and Britain had an exchange
program in which two American pilots went to the English school, while
two British pilots attended school in the United States. Would Kincheloe
be interested? The answer--was an enthusiastic "Roger". The Empire Test
Pilot's School had the reputation of being one of the best in the world,
equaling that of the USAF's own school at Edwards. Kincheloe's classmates
were the best pilots from Australia, Canada, England, France, Italy, the
Netherlands, Norway, and Thailand. In February 1954, the ten-month
course began. In the morning the pilots attended classes and in the afternoon
they were given testing assignments in the various British jets, turboprops,
and propeller-driven aircraft. They flew fighters and multi-engine bombers,
light planes and helicopters. They even flew gliders. They flew everything.
When the course was finished, Kincheloe was flying better than ever and
could translate his in-flight observations into precise, clearly worded
technical reports. And when he returned to duty in the United States he
found himself assigned to the USAF Flight Test Center at Edwards Air Force
Base. His dream had come true. Many types of testing were being done at
Edwards but the most exciting was the advanced research work. Test pilots
assigned to advanced research work flew the mysterious "X" planes designed
not for combat but to investigate the phenomena of high speed flight at
high altitudes. Its motto was AD IN EXPLORATA, Toward the Unknown.

As a newcomer on the job, Kincheloe could not
fly the research aircraft right away. Instead the new test pilot flew "chase"
for the more experienced men in the experimental planes. The chase pilot
flew alongside the test aircraft and watched for any external trouble which
the pilot could not see. Kincheloe flew as many chase flights as he could
get and finally was assigned to his first test project--checking the gunnery
defects in a new supersonic fighter, the F-100. He did the job so well
that he was given better assignments flying the initial Air Force evaluation
tests on such brand new fighters as the McDonnell F-101, Convair F-102,
Lockheed F-104, and Republic F-105. These were the Phase II tests in which
Air Force pilots put the new plane through its paces after a few demonstrations
by the manufacturer. One day Kincheloe saw a fabulous new research plane-
the Bell X2. The rocket-powered plane was designed to investigate performance
at speeds and altitudes never before reached by man, and to explore the
aerodynamic heating problems encountered at these speeds and heights. To
do this task the X-2 was built with aimless steel wings and tail, and a
K-Monel metal fuselage. Its rocket engine burned a mixture of liquid oxygen
and alcohol, and the craft had to be launched from a B-50 bomber in flight.
The first X-2 had exploded over Lake Ontario, killing Bell's test pilot,
Skip Ziegler. This was the second X-2 which now rested, quiet and docile,
in the hanger. Iven Kincheloe knew he had to fly it. Pete Everest was the
pilot on the X-2 project, and he chose Kincheloe to fly chase for him.
On its first flight the X-2 was slightly damaged in landing, and the program
was delayed. Kincheloe returned to more routine flying and was selected
as project officer for the new F-1OOC which kept him busy well into the
spring of 1956. But he still had his heart set on flying the X-2. In April
the X-2 program went into high gear when Pete Everest flew the rocket plane
to sixty thousand feet at one thousand two hundred miles per hour. Then
Everest received word that he might be transferee and recommended Kincheloe
and another test pilot, Mel Apt, as his alternates. Meanwhile, he would
continue to fly the X-2 while breaking in the new men. On May 22 Everest
flew the X-2 at 1,650 miles per hour and earned the title of "the fastest
man alive." Kincheloe made his first checkout flight in the X-2 on May
25, 1956. He was five inches taller than Everest and in his pressure suit
and parachute, he had no room to spare in the tiny cockpit. "I just won't
rattle around as much," he quipped. The flight itself was not very spectacular.
Its purpose was to give Kincheloe the feel of the airplane, not to make
records. On July 23, 1956, Everest made his last flight in the X-2 and
reached one thousand nine hundred miles per hour, almost three times the
speed of sound. Then he left on another assignment, and at last the X-2
belonged to Iven Kincheloe.

His first goal was to reach an altitude of
100,000 feet or better, but first he had to feel out the plane's reactions
at a slightly lower altitude. On August 3, 1956 Kincheloe climbed to 87,750
feet at a speed of one thousand seven hundred miles per hour with no control
problems. Now the stage was set for Kincheloe's flight into the fringe
of space.

At 9:17 a.m. on September 7, 1956, the X-2
dropped from the belly of the B-50 at 29,500 feet and Kincheloe started
his journey to an altitude no man had ever explored. The X-2 shot upward,
its rocket tubes spitting a long white trail ... 45,000 feet ... 55,000
feet. 65,000 and still going strong Kincheloe's voice was being recorded
on tape as he calmly reported his instrument readings, ninety thousand
feet. The X-2 climbed at more than one thousand five hundred miles per
hour, one hundred thousand feet. Two minutes and thirteen seconds after
he started the climb the rocket engines ran out of fuel, but the X-2's
momentum carried it upward. Iven Kincheloe was in space. Almost 100 percent
of the earth's atmosphere was beneath him. There was no air to support
the X-2, and at one hundred twenty thousand feet the sky was a deep purple.
The sun-rays, unfiltered by atmosphere, were so bright that Kincheloe could
not read his knee-pad. The X-2 was losing momentum now. It reached the
top of its curve at 126,200 feet and began to nose down toward earth. Kincheloe
let the plane dive vertically and the speed picked up to more than one
thousand seven hundred miles per hour. As he entered the denser atmosphere,
Kincheloe began to level out. At fifty thousand feet his chase pilot came
alongside and escorted the X-2 down. The rocket plane touched down at 240
miles per hour and slid for over a mile before it came to rest. Iven Kincheloe
was acclaimed as the first man into space.

The X-2's next flight was made by Mel Apt on
September 27, 1956. It was a speed run and the X-2 reached 2,060 miles
per hour, exceeding Everest's record. Then the rocket plane went out of
control and crashed. Mel Apt was killed and the X-2 program ended.

Kincheloe missed Mel Apt and he missed the
little white X-2. But a successor to the X-2 was already being built by
North American. It would have four times the power of the X-2, twice the
speed, and would climb twice as high. It was the X-15. However, the test
program was three years away, so Kincheloe satisfied himself with more
routine jobs, hoping to be named to the X-15 assignment.

In August 1957, Air Force Chief of Staff General
Thomas D. White presented Captain Iven C. Kincheloe with the Mackay Trophy
for "the most meritorious flight of the preceding year." A month later
Kincheloe was selected as the X-15 project test pilot with Captain Bob
White as his alternate.

The X-15 would not be ready to fly until 1958
at the earliest, but Kincheloe spent the intervening time undergoing a
rigorous training program. He was introduced to the centrifuge which simulated
the G forces he would encounter in the X-15. He participated in experiments
in weightlessness and spent hours in a mock-up of the X-15's cabin. He
tested his new space suit as well as his own reaction in a vacuum chamber
which would simulate as altitude of one hundred miles. In June 1958, he
got his first look at the nearly completed X-15 in which he planned to
"blast out of this world."

Meanwhile, Kincheloe kept flying. On July 26,
1958, he took off in a F-104 to fly chase for Lou Schaik, a civilian test
pilot for Lockheed. The F-104 was a, and is, a mean airplane. Although
it was almost fifty-five feet long, its stubby wings spanned only twenty-two
feet. Its gliding angle was straight down and pilots respectfully dubbed
it the "missile-with-a-man-in-it." Another feature was the pilot's
ejection system. Instead of ejecting upward through the canopy, the pilot
shot himself downward out of the airplane. Kincheloe climbed to almost
two thousand feet when suddenly the engine quit. Immediately the plane
began to fall, and Kincheloe was already too low to eject downward, while
he still had control of the plane, he began to roll it over on its back,
calling over the radio, "Edwards, Mayday Seven Seventy-two, bailing out."
The plane was almost inverted when Kincheloe ejected, his parachute still
unfurling, followed into the flames.

Captain Iven Carl Kincheloe, Jr. was dead,
and was buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery
on August 1, 1958.

To perpetuate the memory of Captain Iven C,
Kincheloe, Purdue University established the Kincheloe Scholarship Fund
to aid undergraduates in the study of aeronautics and astronautics.

The X-15 made history. On June 27, 1962, Joseph
A. Walker flew it at 4,105 miles per hour and Major Bob White, Kincheloe’s
alternate, reached an altitude of 314,750 feet (59.6 miles) on July 17,
1962, fulfilling the dream of America's first spaceman.

Kincheloe Air Force Base was named in his honor
on September 25, 1959.